The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 1, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1934 Seattle C. P. Calls on S. P. for United Fight on Terror; Green’s Anti-Red Drive Launched in N.Y. Musicians’ Local Four-Point Program For Joint Struggle Is Sent to All Branches Appeal Rectien Winker’ of Strike and of Boss Vio- lence in Calling for Joint Action for Workers’ | Rights, Against War and | Fascism | SEATTLE, Wash. July 3 1.—An open call for united vot front action against the terrorism raging along the Pacific} Coast and for the release of activities during the recent “vigilante” all workers jailed for strike raids was issued sev- eral days ago by the Communist Party here to the local of-| fices of the Socialist Party. ® The ful tion ser statement of the invita- united action has been the State, county and Party organizations delegation will visit the various Socialist Party locals and offices for serious discussion on ways and means of forming a joint United Front Committee to take care of the practical arrange- ments. for out to A personal Fall Text The full text of the letter sent to the Socialist Party follows: . . TO THE STATE, COUNTY, AND{ CITY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEES, AND TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE) SOCIALIST PARTY Fellow Workers: A reign of terror has swept the State of Washington. Tear gas| bombs, machine guns, and other instruments of death are used} against the workers in the state of Washington. Workers’ homes are | raided, furniture is smashed, litera-/} ture confiscated, the Ku Klux Klan} ts burning crosses in front of work-| ers’ homes. he vigilante groups under police protection are openly terrorizing. This terror is the an- wer of the shipowners to the great | ant strike’ on the West Coast. | he longshoremen. and seamen, with the aid of the militant organi- zations, and the rank and file of the | American Federation of Labor, have| been fighting for the most ele- mentary rights of the workers, such as higher wages, shorter hours and against fink halls. For Elementary Rights The workers, organized and unor- ganized, recognized that this mari-| time strike js a strike against the} strikebreakihg N.R:A. Not only the | workers but the farmers, who are | exploited by the same monopolistic | capitalists, have recognized that | this maritime strike is a strike for] elementary rights, and the farmers | all over the state have been col-| lecting food, supporting the strikers | and refusing to scab. The ship owners, supported by the government, have also mcognined | the power of the workers in that| strike. They united their forces to! smash this united front. General} Johnson, Wagner, all the highlights of the N.R.A. came to the West Coast to aid in the smashing of the strike, A. F. of L. Leaders’ Role The leadership of the American Federation of Labor also came to the aid of the government. First Joseph P. Ryan tried to sell out the Jongshoremer, The rank and file ousted him, and sent him back to the East. President Green sent telegrams to the Central Labor Council of Seattle, instructing it not to support the maritime workers. | In California due to the pressure brought by the rank and file, the| leadership of the American Federa- tion of Labor who opposed the gen-| eral strike took the lead in betrayal. These are only a few of the activ- ities by the government and the} American Federation of Labor offi-| cialdom in this great heroic strike. These actions on the West Coast are not isolated. The same thing | | crush the growing resistance of the} workers and farmers. Roosevelt and nis administration are rapidly putting on Hitler's boots. In Germany are hundreds of thou- | sands of workers, Communists, So- cialists, and non-Party members, lying in dungeons and concentra- tion camps. Thousands have lost their lives in the struggle against bloody fascism. The lives of the| best tried working-class leaders are | in danger. Thaelmann is being tor- tured, and the Nazis are trying to bring him to a speedy trial by the “Peoples Court.” The brutal attack against the working class has only one aim, the | destruction of working class organ- | izations, and the plunging of the | world into a new war in order to} save the decaying capitalist system. | We are fully aware of the pro- grammatic differences that exist | between our Party and your | Party. Nevertheless immediate united action to stop the growing | danger of fascism and war, the threat of destroying the working | class organizations, can not be delayed. In France, the Commu- nist Party and the Socialist Party have agreed to a united front program for joint action, and we are sure it can be done here. Therefore we call upon you to elect a committee, and we shall do likewise to work out immedi- ately a working program which will serye the interests of the | working class. We should suggest as a basis the following points: 1.—For immediate release of all striking seamen and longshore- men. 2. For the right to organize, strike and picket, and for the de- | fense of workers’ headquarters | and press. 3. For Unemployment and So- cial Insurance, H, R. 7598, | 4. Fight against war and Fas- | cism, for the release of Thael- mann, and all victims of fascism. It is time to act. Joint action} can not be delayed any longer. Our committees will appear before you ha take up the question in person. Fraternally yours, DISTRICT BURO, COMMUNIST PARTY, DISTRICT 12. 18 | Terror Fails to Cow Workers SEATTLE, Wash. July 31—In} face of the most brutal fascist ter- | ror that still continues against Communists and militant worke! the Communist Party lives, works and leads the workers throughout the northwest industrial regions, | The terror which started in| Seattle has spread to Centralia, Salem and Eugene. But after the Mayor of Seattle | set up a special committee to halt | the opening of the Communist head- | quarters, thousands of leaflets were | issued by the Party. Workers were | arrested while distributing these | leaflets. Following the arrest of the | | leaflet distributers a demonstration | protesting the terror was held in- | volving 2,000 workers, at which there was only one arrest. Despite several raids by police on the Party paper, the Voice of Ac- tion, and orders not to print the paper, it is still being printed and placed into the hands of the workers. | delegates at the county meeting that |the unemployed had won another | their ee ee . | poration, | were killed in Ossining was allowed |contract because it was the lowest | bid, .| the low insurance and accidents. ee] Occurred in Toledo, Milwaukee, New | aes bless Pla n| GUTTERS OF NEW YORK (PoLice onven| ‘LABOR LEADERS! Mass March In Penn State PITTSBURGH,, July 31.—In a| joint call issued today, the Unem- ployment Councils and the In- Workers Unemployment Insurance League called upon the unemployed workers of Allegheny county to | mobilize for a mass march on Har- risburg during the special session of the state legislature. The work- ers will demand the passage of the | Worekrs Unemployment Insurance Bill by the state legislature. The call was issued by a county committee meeting at which Phil Frankfeld, unemployed leader, and} I. Amter, secretary of the National Unemployment Councils, spoke. Both speakers hailed the successful ap-| | plicat ion of the united front which |has brought ten locals of the In- dependent Unemployed Citizens League into the struggle. Representatives from Fayette and Washington counties pledged sup- | port to the hunger march on Harris- j burg. Frankfield announced to the 300} victory in forcing the relief adminis- tration to pay rents during August, and stressed the need of mass pres- sure to make this policy permanent. Amter stressed the need of} doubling the present strength of the| Unemployment Councils to meet the |rising attacks upon the jobless. Amter further stressed the im- portance of intensifying the struggle | |for the release of Egan, Frankfeld | and the Ambridge prisoenrs stating that “Egan and Frankfeld today) represent not themselves, but the | masses of workers who fight under ‘U.S. Army Has Contract With Death Bus Co. NEW YORK-—Army officials had awarded a contract for the trans- portation of 20,000 young men to Civil Conservation Camps at Camp| Dix,, N. J., to the Rialto Bus Cor- the concern that owned the bus in which nineteen persons to operate carrying only $5000 in-| surance on each bus, when the con- | tract specifically called for $10,000 insurance minimum. The Army offi- cials, however, had awarded the The lives of the C.C.C. boys were further endangered by the long |heurs of which the Rialto drivers were forced to endure. Drowsiness} had recently caused an accident in New Jersey on July 3, when forty- seven boys were almost killed or | injur ed. Army officias who awarded the| contract until October had kept| their eyes shut to the hazards. They | |expressed “surprise” when told of| Trial This Morning of 2 Negro Tenants in the Bronx Segregation Fight NEW YORK. — Postponed five | times in an attempt to lull the vigi- lance of white and Negro fighters against segregation, the trial of two of the fourteen Negro tenants ordered evicted from 1638-1640 Uni- versity Ave., Bronx., will be con- tinued this morning in municipal court, 161st and Washington Ave. All workers are urged to pack the court, OIL WORKERS WIN AGREEMENT EAST CHICAGO, Ind., July 31— all soreen By | Limbach New Organizer CHICAGO WORKERS WIN FIGHT AGAINST BEACH JIM-CROWISM (@aily Worker Midwest Bureau) united ranks, smashed through | every Jim Crow regulation on the Jackson Park Beach Sunday. Every force opposed to real strug- gle against white chauvinism, from the Negro reformists with their ery of “don’t mix with the whites,” to | the gangsters and police who had attempted to stir up race violence at previous solidarity beach parties, stood helpless before the mass fra- ternization and good fellowship that | Os | and white. marked a large beach party held to demonstrate against segregation | on the beach. More than 300 persons, Negro and white, joined in mass games on what was formerly the “lily white” part of the beach. Groups con~ stantly walked back and forth across the old “color line.” Gates were made Saturday in the fence that had always been the “color line,” the direct result of tre- mendous sentiment for the entire removal of the fence as a symbol of | Jim Crowism. South Park police, who had last week threatened to smash any jon the beach, were mobilized over CHICAGO, July 31.—Negro and) | white workers, massed together in; | | | | 4 a hundred strong, but did not dare to interfere. They had attacked two previous beach parties of a sim- ilar nature, arresting more than 40 | Negro and white workers and stu- dents. The South Park Board was forced | to reverse its policy and promise its | non-interference only after a storm of protests from workers, intellectu- als and organizations had poured in upon it following previous arrests and threats to use every bit of force it had to smash the unity of Negro This Sunday there was not one single bit of trouble. This gave the lie to claims of the cops that previous arrests had as their pur- pose the prevention of “race riots.” The unanimous sentiment of workers questioned by the Daily Worker on the effect of the beach party was that it marked a great stride in breaking down the separa- tion of Negro and white workers, and that it was a clear proof of the correct policy of the Young Communist League and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, the organizations which called the af- party of Negro and white" ‘workers fair. Councils Ask Beitad Front At Unemployed League Meet (Special to the Daily Worker) COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 31—The | Unemployment Councils distributed a statement to all the delegates at the second national convention of the Unemployed Leagues, which opened here yesterday, calling upon the delegates to fight for unity and to fight for a united front action to be held in Washington when Congress opens in January. The convention reports by the Musteite leaders clearly showed the leaders’ fear of carrying on a strug- gle against the Roosevelt “New Deal” of hunger. Ramuglia, one of the leaders of the Unemployed Leagues, gave the central slogan when he declared in When Johnson began his report, delegates began leaving the hall. Ramuglia was forced to rap for} order, stating that the convention had not yet ended. Johnson's re- port, began and ended with finances, received no applause, and dampened the whole militant spirit of the con- vention. Richard Harrington, of the Seattle delegation, received an ovation after his clear exploitation of a program of struggle during which he raised the question of struggle around the demands of the jobless Negroes. Behind the scenes, A. J. Muste holds caucuses every night, and the National Executive Committee, in- |spired at these meetings, attempted “Give us funds Mooney Files Pardon Appeal SAN FRANCISCO, July 31. Friday, the eighteenth anniv \of his arrest on a frame-up charge of complicity in the Preparedness Mooney, through his attorney, Leo Gallagher, filed application for a pardon with Governor Frank Mer- riam, Attached to the application is a statement of Mooney giving, in ad- dition to the mass of evidence of his innocence presented to previous gov- }ernors, a further reason that he was acquitted last year of the original murder charge, when tried on an old remaining indictment. Mooney’s statement follows: “Eighteen years from the day I was arrested, and seventeen years after the evidence against me was exposed as perjured, I am aagin compelled to appeal for the fifth time to a governor of California for executive clemency.” Mooney’s application contains the following statement: “On May 24, 1933, over tremen- dous opposition, I forced my case again before a Court and jury, I stipulated that where witnesses were dead or unavailable the State might use all the evidence used at my prior trial, provided I were allowed |to disprove it. The District Attor- ney who was elected on his promise to do justice by me, did not dare to present the evidence to a jury, fear- ing an exposure of the whole mon- |strous vicious frame-up, He pub- licly states that al witnesses avail- | able had been thoroughly impeached jand discredited. All material wit- nesses to my prior conviction were javailable except Oxman, and the perjurer has been discredited and condemned by everyone without ex- ception. The District Attorney, over an advised verdict, which was given —thus making impossible the ex- posure before a jury of the whole frame-up.” Socialist Groups Join United Front (Continued from Page 1) in arranging joint anti-war demon- strations on August 1, despite the offical refusal of the local Socialist Party office to accept the proposals of the Communist Party there. Forbid Joint Action In other cities, however, the So- cialist Party offices have refused to accept proposals for joint action on specific issues on the ground that the National Office of the Socialist Party forbids any such actions, In New York, Cleveland, Milwau- kee, Richmond and other cities, the Communist Party has proposed joint actions on the basis of special local struggles in the interests of the workers, on the fight to free Thael- mann and all anti-fascist prisoners in Germany, and the struggle against war and fascism. | No Reply | Thus far no answer has been re- |ceived by the Communist Party in | response to its two Open Letters }sent to the National Executive |Committee of the Socialist Party offering to meet in mutual discus- sion for the arrangement of a united front agreement on fighting for working class. Invite S. P. Workers Despite this, the Communist Party and all its local offices urge joint actions wherever possible, pointing out that the united actions of the working class are the only guarantee against the advance of fascist reaction with its brutality one terrorism against the working class. Day bombing of July 22, 1916, Tom| A 5 ole tateach ae reo| Rank and File Group Calls on Members to Vote ‘With Governor } | my most earnest protest asked for | 2 the members of the local forced | the immediate needs of the | St Members Must Sign Open Card on Having Communists inUnion For Admission of All Workers Without Regard to Political Views NEW YORK,— William Green's, fascist drive against Communists and militant workers has been} opened with full force in Local 802 of the American Federation of Mu- | sicians. | This first open move in Green’s| so-called purging campaign was brought to light when M. S. Rauch, | international secretary of the Fed-| eration, mailed postcards to every member of Lecal 802 on which were} the following questions; 1. Do you approve of Commu- | nistic agitation within the union? | 2. Shall Communists be mem- bers of the Union? According to the directions on the | card, the -questions are to be an-| swered over the signature of the member and returned promptly to the office of Local 802. | The registration is obviously an attempt on the part of the reac- | tionary leaders of the union to crush | the rank and file movement that | has grown to great proportions dur- | ing the past few months. | Disgusted with the class collabor- ation policies of the national lead- ership of the Federation, the rank and file of the musicians launched @ campaign for local autonomy and a class struggle policy in the union. The question was voted on in the Jocal and local autonomy was won, at least on paper. The militancy the national officials to give con-| sideration to their demands. But the reactionary leaders did| not give up so quick. Spurred on| by William Green’s fascist “purg- | ing” campaign and the rise of fas- | cism throughout the country, Rauch and his agents gave the aor of Local 802 certain conditions un- der which they would be ranted’) local autonomy. The conditions, as cited on s card sent out by Rauch, are: “That to every member of Local | 802 an opportunity be given to vote as to whether or not he ap- proves of Communistic agitation | within the union or that Commu- | nists be members of the union. That the members have an oppor- tunity to send their vote through the mail so that everyone may have the chance to express his opinion and that it be made obli- | gatory upon every member to cast his vote.” Thus local autonomy, which the members voted for, was “given” to the union. In fact, leaders of the Federation lied when they sent out the news that Local 802 was granted local autonomy. Local autonomy was granted with reservations. Conditions under which autonomy | was granted were as follows: | 1) That the union keep its $10,- | 000 a year president, Edward Can- | avan, rf 2) That this high-salaried pres- Classified AIRY, Modern, newly-decorated Room. Ele- vator, Private, Reasonable. 145 Second Ave. Apt, 20. GRamercy 17-2088. AIRY ROOM, separate entrance, all_con- veniences. 145 Second Ave., near Ninth | 23, S$ FOR HIRE for Picnics, Out- Reasonable. Brownies Delivery Ser- vice, 3¢ West 2ist St. ident be given complete veto power on all acts of the local. 3) That a vote he taken in the local on the question of Commu- nism. 4) That the local repudiate the charges of racketeering brought before the Copeland Committee in Washington so that the corrupt officials could clear their skirts. Aside from this Canavan adopted a policy of calling members of the union who were leading the fight for local autonomy before the gov- erning board. Charges were bought against 1§ members of the rank }and file committee, which led the fight and they were fined $300 each, The right of appeal is denied to all members receiving fines under $500, Meanwhile the rank and file com- mittee met. This committee, which | represents the opinion of the ma- jority of the membership, has urged the members to state on the post- card ballots that they believe in the right of every member of the union to agitate for whatever he thinks will aid the union. On the question of Communists being members of the union the committee is urging the members to vote “Yes.” Any musician who pays his dues ean be a member, says the rank and file committee. It is expected, however, that Can- javan and his understrappers will jannounce the vote to suit them- | selves. In this case the members of jthe union are urged to repudiate the action of the leadership by | broadening the rank and file protest wihtin the local and demanding that full local autonomy, for which the musicians Picci be put into effect. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 1-2, 6-3 P.M Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Get. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR, 17-0135 COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, EYES EXAMINED Ry JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel, ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises York City CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.Y.O. All Comrades Meet at the’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ——— Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 E. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER __! his keynote speech: to put across a resolution that all The Communist Party extends Jersey, Minneapolis, etc. This is | The strike of 650 workers in the N. ¥, U. Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City part of the N. R. A. program to ee, Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) | | | | KRAUS & SONS, Ine. |) Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons for Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET || felephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS QUALITY BAKING CO. 44-19 Broadway, Astoria, L. I. J. and Z, DEMIRJIAN, Pro} Oriental Famous Shashlik at all in a day's notice NEEDLE WORKERS PATRONIZE SILVER FOX CAFETERIA and BAR 326-7th Avenue Between 28th and 29th Streets Food Workers Industrial Union Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Algonquin 4-3356—4-8343—4-7823 Restaurant and Garden “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 382 East 14th Street New York City Tompkins Square 6-9132 WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available, Cultural Activities for Adults, | Youth and Children. | Direction Trains. ~ Brighton Comrades Patronize Parkway Food Center Fish Market Texington Ave. White Plains} Stop at Allerton Ave. | station | Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m 3051 Ocean Parkway Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. | Corner Brighton Beach Ave. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Priday and Saturday 9 am to 3 p.m.| | sports’ pages any time he does some- Shell Petroleum Company refinery which was started last Wednesday in an effort to win union recogni- tion, was ended after an agreement was reached, Get Daily Worker Subscribers! | or give us death.” Neither Ramug- lia in his report nor Johnson in the officers report attempted to make a Political analysis of the unemploy- ment situation or the development of fascism through the N.R.A., but placed the fascist attacks, especially on the Negroes, as a brutal pheno- | Earn Expenses Selling the “Daily” |menon to be “met.” committees be appointed. This started a rebellion, headed by a woman delegate from West Virginia, who was loudly applauded when she said: “You tell us that we have no bureaucratic organiza- tion, yet all committees are handed down to us from the top. This is a convention of the rank and file.” COMMENTS ON SPORTS TRIKERS, says Sam Darey in his article on the West Coast mari- time strike in the “Communist,” were continually sent to outlying areas to counter-act the influence being used on college students, among others, to act as scabs. It is in this strike that Bill Ingram, former football coach at Annapolis and a former lieutenant in the U. S. navy, distinguished himself by acting as a scab- herder. Lieutenant Ingram is now coaching at Berkeley, Pk & 'TRANGELY enough, the sports’ columnists made no mention of Lieutenant Ingram’s noble work in this respect. It cannot be argued that it was outside the field of their endeavors. A football coach is a legitimate item of news for the thing interesting, and this was certainly a human-interest story, if ever there was one. If the esca- paces in society of an Enzo Fier- | monte deserve columns in the sports ges, then certainly so did this patriotic stunt of a football coach deserve the publicity. But if we ask this question we might as well ask why the sports columnists (in New York, for in- stance), who have enough ideas to fill the Grand Canyon on every conceivable subject, did not expati- ate on the unionization activities of the ushers in the ball-parks and in Madison Square Garden. And we might ask why they all en- shrouded themselves in silence when an usher in Madison Square Garden was fired for his union activities— when, on the other hand, they have gloriously told us all about the Six Hundred Millionaires who control that prize-fight emporium. But, it will be remembered, when Benny Friedman was hired at $10,000 a year to coach the City College football team, for the announced design of arousing a “rah-rah” spirit among the stu- dents and thus combating the in- sidious “Red Propaganda” (prop- aganda against war and fascism), which was undermining their “good American characters,” then the sports columnists expanded themselves in describing Benny’s exploits on the football field and pointing out what a prize he was and that if anybody could give City College a winning football team he was the one. lags guine RASI, Secretary of the Mid- west District of the Labor Sports Union, reports another illustration of the use of athletes by the bosses. He dispatches a picture from the St. Paul News. It shows the foot- ball team of the Moorehead state teachers college, headed by their coach dressed in National Guard uniforms and pointing rifles at the Minneapolis strikers. They have heen brought over to help break the strike. “Rioters,” says the News, will no longer be able to deride the National Guard as “mere babes in the woods with pop-guns. .. . Capt. Nenzek (the coach) is now showing the boys fine points in the field of war.” The thought is clear. It is war in the intention of the bosses—war to the death. In Minneapolis alone one striker was murdered and 66 wounded when police fired on them iless than two weeks ago, 1 hie football players are par- ticipating in the progressing fas- a hand of comradely welcome to all Socialist workers, whatever their differences, for the practical, sincere formation of joint actions against the common enemies of the working class, It calls upon all Socialist workers to join in the August 1 demonstra- tions against war and fascism. By William Fuchs cization of this country. Athletes and athletics are handy tools for the bosses. Benny Friedman is hired to keep students from protesting against war and fascism. In an- other case the athletes are used to shoot down workers protesting against their bosses. The sum is easy to see: War and fascism and the bosses—capitalism. It is vital, therefore, that every athlete support the Labor Sports Union, the only sports organiza- tion that stands resolutely against the militarization and fascization of athletes and athletics. It is vital, therefore, that every athlete support the World Sports Congress Against War and Fas- cism, which takes place in Paris, August 11 to 15, oe * a kes! American delegates to the In- ternational meet leave tonight at 10 p, m. on the S. 8. Berengaria. from the 14th St. pier. They are Richazd Neikkinen, national sec- retary of the L. S. U., George Har- vey and Joe Halmus. Members of the Labor Sports Union Club are urged to be at the pier to give them @ mass send-off, Camp Nitgedaiget Swimming BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, N. ¥. Baseball Soccer * Treat Yourself to a Real Vacation! Tennis ry Handball Volley Excellent Sports’ Equipment. Interesting Daily Pingpong Programs and Activities, Workers School Horseshoe Theatre Brigade. Chorus. Flashlight Dances Pitching Finest Food, Comfortable Quarters Boxing Quills ¢ Hiking Proletarian Rates: $14.00 A Week Campfires FUN! Sa from 2700 Bronx Park East. Frid: 3 & 7 P.M. EStabrook 8-1400. Cars leave 10:30 A.M. dail; 10 A, CAMP UNITY GALA WATER SPORTS MEET! (Directed by Yale, of the Labor Sports Union) FP. S. The illustration above is not an example of this! Open Air Theatre Red Vodvil Team, Unity Players, Hans Eisler Trio, Ete. DANCE! SING! ALL THE SPORTS! $11.00 a week, Cars leave 10:30 A.M. daily from 2700 Bronx Park FE. for Wi N.Y. Fridays & Saturdays at 10 A.M. 3 and 7 P.M. Phone ALgonqain ay CAMP STORE CARRIES CAMP TOGS AT CITY PRICES.

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